Hi,

In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
        on Tue, 26 Apr 2005 07:12:26 +0200 (CEST),
        Henrik Nordstrom <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> It's true that it is annoying to some that the patches is updated, 
> certainly so on cosmetic fixes such as the one in cachemgr.c, but most 
> often the patch updates are quite critical in nature (fixing bugs in the 
> published patch) and the old patch should no longer be used or referenced. 
> For us it is a feature that this breaks distfiles, as it prevents rebuilds 
> using the broken patch.
Completely broken patch which can not be used to patch should be
replaced.  But after that, I wish farther changes would be done by
another patch incrementally.

Or I would happy patch files are under some time stamped directories.

        2005042100/squid-2.5.STABLE9-cachemgr_objects.patch
                   ...
        2005042600/squid-2.5.STABLE9-cachemgr_objects.patch
                   ...

So, latest patches are under latest date of directory.

> IMHO package maitainers should only include the patches seen absolutely 
> required by your QA of the packaged release. Generally you should wait 
> until the next release making both yours and our life easier. For package 
> maintainers the patches is mainly provided in case your QA policy does not 
> allow updating to the new STABLE release and requires backporting of the 
> relevant changes after the new release is published.
But once I choose to using a patch, previous patch needs to be applied
and always fear chosen patch files would be modified suddenly.

(And package maintainer are sensitive "security fix" patches.)


Anyway, this is my little wish.

-- 
Takahiro Kambe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

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